Tales Of The Unexplained

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All Rise...

Judge David Johnson found "The Tale of Paris Hilton's Success" conspicuously absent from this disc.

The Charge

What do Erik Estrada and Jack the Ripper have in common? Read on!

The Case

I'm not sure where Westlake dug up this aged series of documentaries about
the unknown, but I'm guessing the original print was hidden in box somewhere in
the bowels of an insane asylum.

The disc features four episodes of Tales of the Unexplained,
apparently some kind of television show. Each episode features multiple
segments, all of which supposedly tie into a common theme, though that's a
stretch. Segments are narrated and feature loads of cheap-looking stock footage,
mixed with interviews and cheesy reenactments.

Let's take a closer look, shall we?

• "UFO Chronicles" This hour-long episode sets
the table for what's to come, establishing a standard of sheer lunacy that the
episodes that follow are ensured to have a tough time surpassing. The program
kicks off with twenty minutes devoted to the Roswell crash and the perceived
subsequent cover-up. All manner of eyewitnesses and "experts" are
interviewed, and none are hesitant to offer their own particular conspiracy
theory. But the best is yet to come.

We also meet the "Pleiadians," folks who are apparently the result
of a secret government experiment that inserted alien genetic material into
human embryos. None of the Pleiadians interviewed were as hot as Natasha
Henstridge, though.

The kicker of the disc came when we met Earth's representatives in the
Galactic Federation. You see, the Galactic Federation is to the universe what
the United Nations is to the world—a useless fantasy. Earth is supposedly
much sought after by the Sirius galaxy, and in 1996 our planet was scheduled to
collide with a proton belt in outer space, at which time all of us humans were
to become fully conscious and happy and so on. The frumpy yahoo couple that was
interviewed represents the folks who will usher in this dramatic, metaphysical
change, even though the husband who is tasked with spearheading the process has
yet to master the intricacies of the comb-over.

My favorite moment comes during the description of the constituency of the
Galactic Federation, where we learn that most members of the Sirius galaxy
(Sirians—hey, isn't that ethnicity already taken?) look like us, and in
some cases are taller, shorter, and transparent, even "more humanoid, if
that's possible." No, it's not possible to be more humanoid than a human,
which is like saying that a piece of fruit is more banana-like than a
banana.

• "Creatures of the Night" This
supernatural-themed episode details a few ghost stories, including the legend of
Montgomery Clift. This actor supposedly haunts one of the floors of the
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Visitors report hearing sounds of a violin from time
to time, and one cocktail waitress swears she felt a cold draft once.

Segments looking at the reports of visions of the Virgin Mary
(pre-grilled-cheese, of course), a ghost story where a woman believes her dead
child is riding in her car, and a few bits about Nostradamus and werewolves are
also included.

But the kicker is the Kombucha mushroom, a fungus that may or may not have
been planted here by extraterrestrials and has fallen into the hands of a goofy
couple who decided to turn it into an herbal elixir. The special tea made from
the mushroom is distributed as a possible miracle cure. Look, maybe herbal
remedies are your deal, and the Kombucha mushroom has cleared up your leprosy
real good. I'm happy for you. But wait until you see the super-duper processing
plants for the tea, which looks to be no bigger than my garage.
Actually…is that my garage?

Folksy Old-Guy Wacko Rating: "Crazier than a polecat in a duck
pond!"

• "London Underworld" Contrary to the title of
this episode, the segments—save for the introductory look at Jack the
Ripper—have nothing to do with either London or the underworld. I will
admit, the Jack the Ripper stuff was interesting, and the program offered up
plenty of theories on the identity of the notorious killer. But it's all
downhill from there. We've got some stories on reincarnation, a few testimonials
about life after death (where—believe it or not—they saw the
light!), and a special segment devoted to an out-of-body experience by Erik
Estrada.

Ponch?!

While filming a scene from CHiPs, Estrada was seriously injured. In
the emergency room he nearly died, and, as he recounts, he had a vivid
experience of getting off the bed, looking back, and seeing his body splayed
out. Eventually, of course, he hopped back in. Costar Larry Wilcox is on hand to
talk about the experience as well.

• "The Mysteries of Life" Our last entry focuses
on four stories: a woman who survived a fire thanks to the encouragement of her
unborn son, an investigation into the mystery of walking on hot coals,
"Cryonics," the method of freezing either your whole body or just your
head so that you can resuscitated later in the future, and, finally, a look at
how cult leaders manage to brainwash followers.

The "Cryonics" piece sports interviews with the doctor in charge
of deep-freezing people, though after seeing him and listening to his rants, I
wouldn't trust him to remove a splinter from my thumb.

However, I have to give props to the "Divine Magnetism," a feature
that I found authentically creepy. Cults and their leaders always manage to wig
me out, and hearing the stories of Jim Jones and David Koresh (surviving Branch
Davidians are interviewed), I couldn't help but get a little spooked.

Folksy Old-Guy Wacko Rating: "Loopier than a Koala bear in a
clothes dryer!"

There you have it: 200 minutes of a mystery hodge-podge. I'd say the disc is
about 20% interesting and 80% kooky. The recycling of stock footage is
ridiculous (for example, when one man's childhood is referred to, some random
black-and-white footage of kids is rolled; in a ploy to pad the run time,
lengthy clip from movies about Roswell and Nostradamus are shown; footage of
aliens looks to have been secured from some kid's attempt at a home movie about
extraterrestrials).

But if you're down with the Pleiadians or are interested in more information
about the Galactic Federation or want to learn about the Kombucha mushroom,
don't let my anti-postmodern approach deter you from an, er, enlightening
experience.

This is a barebones release. The full-frame transfer is poor, as the quality
of the nearly every segment is grainy and washed out. The stereo mix is adequate
but uninspiring to say the least. A lack of bonus features drives the final nail
into this disc's coffin.